1.Balanced Scorecard for Performance Measurement of a Nursing Organization in a Korean Hospital.
Yoonmi HONG ; Kyung Ja HWANG ; Mi Ja KIM ; Chang Gi PARK
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2008;38(1):45-54
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to develop a balanced scorecard (BSC) for performance measurement of a Korean hospital nursing organization and to evaluate the validity and reliability of performance measurement indicators. METHOD: Two hundred fifty-nine nurses in a Korean hospital participated in a survey questionnaire that included 29-item performance evaluation indicators developed by investigators of this study based on the Kaplan and Norton's BSC (1992). Cronbach's alpha was used to test the reliability of the BSC. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis with a structure equation model (SEM) was applied to assess the construct validity of the BSC. RESULT: Cronbach's alpha of 29 items was .948. Factor analysis of the BSC showed 5 principal components (eigen value >1.0) which explained 62.7% of the total variance, and it included a new one, community service. The SEM analysis results showed that 5 components were significant for the hospital BSC tool. CONCLUSION: High degree of reliability and validity of this BSC suggests that it may be used for performance measurements of a Korean hospital nursing organization. Future studies may consider including a balanced number of nurse managers and staff nurses in the study. Further data analysis on the relationships among factors is recommended.
Adult
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Female
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Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Hospitals
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Humans
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Korea
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Male
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Nursing Evaluation Research
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Nursing Staff, Hospital/organization & administration/*standards
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Questionnaires
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Task Performance and Analysis
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Young Adult
2.Seasonal Pattern of Preterm Births in Korea for 2000–2012.
Yoonmi WOO ; Yung Taek OUH ; Ki Hoon AHN ; Geum Joon CHO ; Soon Cheol HONG ; Min Jeong OH ; Hai Joong KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(11):1797-1801
The aim of this study was to investigate a seasonal pattern of preterm births in Korea. Data were obtained from the national birth registry of the Korean Statistics Office and included all births in Korea during the period 2000–2012 (n = 6,310,800). Delivery dates were grouped by month of the year or by season (winter [December, January, February], spring [March, April, May], summer [June, July, August], and autumn [September, October, November]). The seasonal patterns of prevalence of preterm births were assessed. The rates of preterm births at 37 weeks were highest twice a year (once in winter and again in summer). The rates of preterm births increased by 13.9% in summer and 7.5% in winter, respectively, than in spring (OR, 1.139; 95% CI, 1.127–1.152, and OR, 1.075; 95% 1.064–1.087, respectively) after controlling for age, the educational level of the parents, maternal parity, and neonatal gender. The pattern for spontaneous preterm births < 34 weeks was similar. In Korea, a seasonal pattern of preterm births was observed, with peak prevalence in summer and winter. A seasonal pattern of preterm births may provide new insights for the pathophysiology of preterm births.
Female
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Humans
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Korea*
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Parents
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Parity
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Parturition
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Premature Birth*
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Prevalence
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Seasons*
3.Protein Kinase C Activity and Delayed Recovery of Sleep-Wake Cycle in Mouse Model of Bipolar Disorder.
Eunsoo MOON ; Byeong Moo CHOE ; Je Min PARK ; Young In CHUNG ; Byung Dae LEE ; Jae Hong PARK ; Young Min LEE ; Hee Jeong JEONG ; YongJun CHEON ; Yoonmi CHOI ; Jeonghyun PARK
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(9):907-913
OBJECTIVE: Previous studies reported the delayed recovery group after circadian rhythm disruption in mice showed higher quinpiroleinduced locomotor activity. This study aimed to compare not only Protein Kinase C (PKC) activities in frontal, striatal, hippocampus and cerebellum, but also relative PKC activity ratios among brain regions according to recovery of circadian rhythm. METHODS: The circadian rhythm disruption protocol was applied to eight-week-old twenty male Institute Cancer Research mice. The circadian rhythm recovery patterns were collected through motor activities measured by Mlog system. Depressive and manic proneness were examined by forced swim test and quinpirole-induced open field test respectively. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was employed to measure PKC activities. RESULTS: The delayed recovery group presented greater locomotor activities than the early recovery group (p=0.033). The delayed recovery group had significantly lower frontal PKC activity than the other (p=0.041). The former showed lower frontal/cerebellar PKC activity ratio (p=0.047) but higher striatal/frontal (p=0.038) and hippocampal/frontal (p=0.007) PKC activities ratios than the latter. CONCLUSION: These findings support potential mechanism of delayed recovery after circadian disruption in bipolar animal model could be an alteration of relative PKC activities among mood regulation related brain regions. It is required to investigate the PKC downstream signaling related to the delayed recovery pattern.
Animals
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Bipolar Disorder*
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Brain
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Cerebellum
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Circadian Rhythm
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Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
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Hippocampus
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Humans
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Male
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Mice*
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Models, Animal
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Motor Activity
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Protein Kinase C*
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Protein Kinases*
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Quinpirole